As of Monday, the reservoirs were at their 78,566 acre-foot capacity — 100 percent full. There are 325,851 gallons in an acre-foot. The average storage for this date is 73.5 percent or 58,501 acre-feet, meaning supplies stand at 136 percent of average. Those supplies are piped to about 190,000 residents from Sausalito to San Rafael.

Since July 1, the district has recorded 33.30 inches of rain at Lake Lagunitas. The average for this time of year is 18.85 inches.

The North Marin Water District — which has 60,000 customers in Novato and West Marin — reports its Stafford Lake reservoir is at 97 percent of capacity. It has recorded 16.41 inches of rain since July 1.

The rain totals will likely stay steady in the coming days. Aside from a slight chance of rain Thursday, the National Weather Service is predicting a sunny New Year's Day and beyond.

"It looks dry through early next week," said Will Pi, meteorologist with the weather service.

Temperatures will be cold Tuesday night, dipping below freezing in some valley areas. But temperatures should warm by Thursday, with daytime highs in the 60s.

"We will start getting winds out of the west, instead of north from Alaska," Pi said.